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Search Results (1,276)

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76 pages, 17838 KB  
Review
Biochemical Conversion of Lignocellulosic Biomass in Biorefinery Systems
by Nei Pereira Junior
Fermentation 2026, 12(2), 88; https://doi.org/10.3390/fermentation12020088 - 4 Feb 2026
Abstract
Lignocellulosic biomass is one of the most abundant renewable carbon resources available, currently used predominantly for energy generation through direct combustion, yet still underutilized as a feedstock for higher-value biochemical conversion. Its structural complexity and intrinsic recalcitrance continue to challenge efficient biological processing. [...] Read more.
Lignocellulosic biomass is one of the most abundant renewable carbon resources available, currently used predominantly for energy generation through direct combustion, yet still underutilized as a feedstock for higher-value biochemical conversion. Its structural complexity and intrinsic recalcitrance continue to challenge efficient biological processing. Overcoming these barriers requires an integrated understanding of plant cell-wall architecture, pretreatment chemistry, enzymatic mechanisms, and process engineering. This review provides a clear and conceptually grounded synthesis of these elements, illustrating how they converge to enable the development of second-generation (2G) lignocellulosic biorefineries. This review examines the hierarchical organization of cellulose, hemicelluloses, and lignin; the principles and performance of modern pretreatment technologies; the synergistic action of cellulolytic systems, including lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases (LPMOs) and non-hydrolytic proteins such as swollenins; advances in C5/C6 sugar fermentation; and emerging strategies for lignin upgrading. In addition to a comprehensive analysis of the literature, representative industrial and experimental case studies reported in the literature are discussed to illustrate practical process behavior and design considerations. By integrating mechanistic insight with industrially relevant examples, this review highlights the technical feasibility, current maturity, and remaining challenges of lignocellulosic biorefineries, underscoring their strategic role in enabling a competitive, low-carbon bioeconomy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Lignocellulosic Biomass in Biorefinery Processes)
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22 pages, 2049 KB  
Article
Predictive Characterization Analysis for Quality Evaluation of Biochar from Olive and Citrus Agricultural Residues: A Practical Framework for Circular Economy Applications
by Monica Carnevale, Adriano Palma, Mariangela Salerno, Francesco Gallucci, Alberto Assirelli and Enrico Paris
Energies 2026, 19(3), 804; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19030804 - 3 Feb 2026
Abstract
The sustainable management and valorisation of agricultural and agro-industrial residues are essential to reduce environmental impacts, enhance resource efficiency, and support circular economy strategies. In Mediterranean regions, large quantities of residual biomass are annually produced from olive and citrus supply chains, representing promising [...] Read more.
The sustainable management and valorisation of agricultural and agro-industrial residues are essential to reduce environmental impacts, enhance resource efficiency, and support circular economy strategies. In Mediterranean regions, large quantities of residual biomass are annually produced from olive and citrus supply chains, representing promising feedstocks for biochar production. In this study, biochar was obtained at 600 °C in a fixed-bed reactor under a N2 atmosphere from four representative feedstocks: olive pruning (OPr), citrus pruning (CPr), olive pomace (OPo), and citrus peel (CPe). The resulting biochar was characterized in terms of physico-chemical, energetic, and structural properties, including proximate and ultimate analyses, fuel properties, cation exchange capacity (CEC), pH, elemental ratios (O/C, H/C, N/C), thermal stability, bulk density, metal content, and surface morphology (SEM), in order to assess parameters relevant to environmental potential applications. The results highlighted clear feedstock-dependent differences. OPoB and CPeB exhibited the highest thermal stability (0.56–0.66), indicating a strong potential for long-term carbon sequestration. CPeB showed the highest CEC (47.2 cmol kg−1). From an application-oriented perspective, this high CEC suggests that, when applied to soil at typical amendment rates (2–5 wt%), CPeB could potentially increase soil CEC by approximately 10–30%, thereby improving nutrient retention and cation availability. Energy yields were highest for citrus-derived biochar (42.0–47.5%), while OPoB exhibited the lowest solid yield due to its higher volatile content. SEM analysis revealed marked structural differences, with OPrB retaining an ordered lignocellulosic porous structure, whereas OPoB and CPeB displayed highly irregular morphologies, favorable for surface reactivity. Overall, this study demonstrates that olive and citrus residues are suitable feedstocks for producing biochar with differentiated properties, and that a rapid screening methodology can support feedstock selection and biochar design for targeted energy, soil amendment, and carbon management applications. Full article
19 pages, 1334 KB  
Article
Simulation and Optimisation of Hydrogen Production from Biogas via Steam–Methane Reforming and Cryogenic Liquefaction Using DWSIM
by Chandra Sekhar, Atena S. Farahani, Mahmoud A. Khader, Christos Kalyvas and Mahmoud Chizari
Processes 2026, 14(3), 532; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr14030532 - 3 Feb 2026
Viewed by 14
Abstract
This study presents an integrated, open-source process simulation for converting agricultural biogas into high-purity liquid hydrogen using DWSIM (Distillation, Water, Separation and Inorganic Modules), an open-source sequential-modular simulator. The model simulates a farm-scale biogas feed and is optimised to enhance liquid hydrogen yield [...] Read more.
This study presents an integrated, open-source process simulation for converting agricultural biogas into high-purity liquid hydrogen using DWSIM (Distillation, Water, Separation and Inorganic Modules), an open-source sequential-modular simulator. The model simulates a farm-scale biogas feed and is optimised to enhance liquid hydrogen yield while reducing specific energy consumption under set operating conditions. The proposed model links biogas upgrading via dual pressure swing adsorption, steam–methane reforming, two-stage water–gas shift, hydrogen purification, and cryogenic liquefaction within a single optimisation framework. Using a representative farm-scale feed (103.7 kg h−1 biogas containing 60 mol% CH4), the optimised process produces 16.5 kg h−1 of liquid hydrogen with 99.2% para-hydrogen purity while simultaneously capturing 104 kg h−1 of CO2 at 98% purity and 16 bar. Optimal operating conditions include SMR at 909 °C and 16 bar with a steam-to-carbon ratio of 3.0, followed by high- and low-temperature water–gas shifts at 413 °C and 210 °C, respectively. The overall cold-gas efficiency (LHV basis, excluding liquefaction electricity) reaches 78%, and the specific electricity demand for liquefaction is 32.4 kWh per kg of liquid hydrogen, which is consistent with reported values for small-scale hydrogen liquefiers. Sensitivity analysis over a methane content range of 40–75% confirms near-linear scalability of hydrogen output (R2 = 0.998), demonstrating feedstock flexibility without re-parameterisation. The developed process in this work provides a transparent and extensible digital twin for early-stage design and optimisation of decentralised biogas-to-hydrogen systems. Using the open-source DWSIM platform ensures full transparency, reproducibility, and accessibility compared with proprietary simulators. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Insights into Hydrogen Production Using Solar Energy)
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20 pages, 878 KB  
Review
Green Hydrogen in Sustainable Agri-Food Systems: A Review of Applications in Agriculture and the Food Industry
by Ferruccio Giametta, Ruggero Angelico, Gianluca Tanucci, Pasquale Catalano and Biagio Bianchi
Sci 2026, 8(2), 30; https://doi.org/10.3390/sci8020030 - 3 Feb 2026
Viewed by 42
Abstract
The agri-food sector is a major contributor to global greenhouse gas emissions while facing increasing demand for food production driven by population growth. Transitioning towards sustainable and low-carbon agricultural systems is therefore critical. Green hydrogen, produced from renewable energy sources, holds significant promise [...] Read more.
The agri-food sector is a major contributor to global greenhouse gas emissions while facing increasing demand for food production driven by population growth. Transitioning towards sustainable and low-carbon agricultural systems is therefore critical. Green hydrogen, produced from renewable energy sources, holds significant promise as a clean energy carrier and chemical feedstock to decarbonize multiple stages of the agri-food supply chain. This systematic review is based on a structured analysis of peer-reviewed literature retrieved from Web of Science, Scopus, and Google Scholar, covering over 120 academic publications published between 2010 and 2025. This review provides a comprehensive overview of hydrogen’s current and prospective applications across agriculture and the food industry, highlighting opportunities to reduce fossil fuel dependence and greenhouse gas emissions. In agriculture, hydrogen-powered machinery, hydrogen-rich water treatments for crop enhancement, and the use of green hydrogen for sustainable fertilizer production are explored. Innovative waste-to-hydrogen strategies contribute to circular resource utilization within farming systems. In the food industry, hydrogen supports fat hydrogenation and modified atmosphere packaging to extend product shelf life and serves as a sustainable energy source for processing operations. The analysis indicates that near-term opportunities for green hydrogen deployment are concentrated in fertilizer production, food processing, and controlled-environment agriculture, while broader adoption in agricultural machinery remains constrained by cost, storage, and infrastructure limitations. Challenges such as scalability, economic viability, and infrastructure development are also discussed. Future research should prioritize field-scale demonstrations, technology-specific life-cycle and techno-economic assessments, and policy frameworks adapted to decentralized and rural agri-food contexts. The integration of hydrogen technologies offers a promising pathway to achieve carbon-neutral, resilient, and efficient agri-food systems that align with global sustainability goals and climate commitments. Full article
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21 pages, 1200 KB  
Article
Integrated Treatment and Valorization of Meat Processing Wastewater via Microalgae-Based Biomass Production
by Ana S. S. Sousa, Ana S. Oliveira, Paula M. L. Castro and Catarina L. Amorim
Clean Technol. 2026, 8(1), 20; https://doi.org/10.3390/cleantechnol8010020 - 3 Feb 2026
Viewed by 36
Abstract
Meat-processing wastewater (MPWW) is rich in nutrients and organic matter. This study assessed its potential as feedstock for microalgal biomass production while enabling wastewater treatment. In batch assays, the microalgae-based consortium grew in raw MPWW, and its synergy with the native wastewater microbial [...] Read more.
Meat-processing wastewater (MPWW) is rich in nutrients and organic matter. This study assessed its potential as feedstock for microalgal biomass production while enabling wastewater treatment. In batch assays, the microalgae-based consortium grew in raw MPWW, and its synergy with the native wastewater microbial community enhanced the chemical oxygen demand (COD) removal rate. If suspended solids were pre-removed from wastewater, COD removing rates improved from 828.5 ± 60.5 to 1097.5 ± 22.2 mg L−1 d−1. In a raceway system operated in fed-batch mode with sieved and sedimented MPWW, COD removal was consistently achieved across feeding cycles, despite the variability in wastewater composition, reaching rates of up to 806.3 ± 0.0 mg L−1 d−1. Total nitrogen also decreased in most cycles. Microalgal biomass, estimated from total photosynthetic pigment’s concentration, increased from 0.4 to 17.9 µg mL−1. The microalgae-based consortium became more diverse over time, harboring at the end, additional eukaryotic taxa such as protozoan grazers and fungi (e.g., Heterolobosea class and Trichosporonaceae and Dipodascaceae families), although their roles in removal processes remain unknown. This study highlights the potential use of real MPWW as feedstock for microalgal-based biomass production with concomitant carbon/nutrient load reduction, aligning its implementation with circular economy percepts. Full article
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24 pages, 1043 KB  
Article
Economic and Technical Viability of Solar-Assisted Methane Pyrolysis for Sustainable Hydrogen Production from Stranded Gas in Nigeria
by Campbell Oribelemam Omuboye and Chigozie Nweke-Eze
Gases 2026, 6(1), 8; https://doi.org/10.3390/gases6010008 - 2 Feb 2026
Viewed by 84
Abstract
This study presents a techno-economic assessment of a modular, solar-assisted methane pyrolysis pilot plant designed for sustainable hydrogen production in Nigeria using concentrated solar power (CSP). Driven by the need to convert flare gas into value and reduce emissions, the work evaluates a [...] Read more.
This study presents a techno-economic assessment of a modular, solar-assisted methane pyrolysis pilot plant designed for sustainable hydrogen production in Nigeria using concentrated solar power (CSP). Driven by the need to convert flare gas into value and reduce emissions, the work evaluates a hypothetical 100 kg/day hydrogen system by integrating a methane pyrolysis reactor with a solar heliostat–receiver field. Process modelling was carried out in DWSIM, while solar concentration behavior was represented using Tonatiuh. The mass–energy balance results show a hydrogen output of 3.95 kg/h accompanied by 12.30 kg/h of carbon black, with the reactor demanding roughly 44 kW of high-temperature heat at 900 °C. The total capital cost of the ≈50 kW pilot plant is approximately USD 1.5 million, with heliostat and receiver technologies forming the bulk of the investment. Annual operating costs are estimated at USD 69,580, alongside feedstock expenses of USD 43,566. Using annualized cost and discounted cash flow approaches, the resulting levelized cost of hydrogen (LCOH) is USD 5.87/kg, which is competitive with off-grid electrolysis in the region, though still above blue and gray hydrogen benchmarks. The results indicate that hydrogen cost is primarily driven by solar field capital expenditure and carbon by-product valorization. Financial indicators reveal a positive NPV, a 13% IRR, and a 13-year discounted payback period, highlighting the promise of solar-assisted methane pyrolysis as a transitional hydrogen pathway for Nigeria. Full article
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47 pages, 2159 KB  
Review
A Review of Current and Emerging Strategies for Recycling Waste: Bicycle Tires and Inner Tubes
by Xiao Yuan Chen and Denis Rodrigue
Recycling 2026, 11(2), 33; https://doi.org/10.3390/recycling11020033 - 2 Feb 2026
Viewed by 67
Abstract
Bicycle tires and inner tubes constitute a growing waste stream mainly composed of natural rubber, butyl rubber, synthetic elastomers, carbon black, and reinforcing materials. Their multi-material structure and highly crosslinked networks make their recycling challenging, yet efficient recovery is essential for advanced circular [...] Read more.
Bicycle tires and inner tubes constitute a growing waste stream mainly composed of natural rubber, butyl rubber, synthetic elastomers, carbon black, and reinforcing materials. Their multi-material structure and highly crosslinked networks make their recycling challenging, yet efficient recovery is essential for advanced circular economy practices. This review summarizes the current and emerging strategies for recycling bicycle tires and inner tubes. It first outlines the materials and additives present in tire casings and butyl inner tubes, which determine their recycling behavior. Mechanical pre-processing methods, including shredding, grinding, and fiber/steel separation, are presented as essential feedstock preparation steps. Thermochemical approaches, such as pyrolysis and thermolysis, are discussed with emphasis on producing value-added fractions, including pyrolysis oil, recovered carbon black, and fuels. Solvent-based feedstock recycling and chemical dissolution are highlighted as promising routes for selective recovery of rubber polymers and additives. Physical, chemical, and biological devulcanization methods are also reviewed for their potential to restore partial processability to reuse reclaimed rubber. Finally, current and prospective applications of recycled materials are discussed, and key challenges with future research needs are identified, including improving devulcanization efficiency, expanding collection systems, and increasing the value of recovered products. Full article
43 pages, 7959 KB  
Perspective
Sustainability Assessment of Bioethanol from Food Industry Lignocellulosic Wastes: A Life Cycle Perspective
by Yitong Niu, Nicholas Starrett, Mardiana Idayu Ahmad, Sicheng Wang, Yunxiang Li and Ting Han
Sustainability 2026, 18(3), 1478; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18031478 - 2 Feb 2026
Viewed by 79
Abstract
Second-generation bioethanol from food industry lignocellulosic residues offers a promising route toward low-carbon, circular bioenergy systems. However, the reported environmental impacts differ markedly across studies, challenging efforts to assess the true sustainability of these waste-derived bioethanol routes. This review synthesizes current knowledge on [...] Read more.
Second-generation bioethanol from food industry lignocellulosic residues offers a promising route toward low-carbon, circular bioenergy systems. However, the reported environmental impacts differ markedly across studies, challenging efforts to assess the true sustainability of these waste-derived bioethanol routes. This review synthesizes current knowledge on the production of bioethanol from key agro-industrial wastes including oil palm empty fruit bunches, sugarcane bagasse, brewers’ spent grain, spent coffee grounds, tea waste, citrus residues, and potato peel waste. We outline feedstock characteristics, availability, and prevailing management practices, and map the principal biochemical conversion routes to identify process steps that drive environmental performance. A systematic comparison of life cycle assessments reveals substantial methodological heterogeneity across functional units, system boundaries, allocation procedures, and impact assessment methods. Nonetheless, consistent hotspots emerge, particularly associated with pretreatment severity, enzyme production, thermal energy demand, and co-product handling. The review highlights robust cross-study trends, pinpoints methodological gaps, and proposes recommendations for harmonized LCA practice. By integrating technological and methodological perspectives, this work aims to support the development and policy uptake of sustainable, waste-based bioethanol within circular bioeconomies. Full article
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34 pages, 2273 KB  
Review
Mobile Pyrolysis Systems for Decentralized Biomass Valorization: Technologies, Products, and Applications
by Catarina Nobre, Santa Margarida Santos, José Copa Rey, Andrei Longo, Bruna Rijo, Roberta Panizio, Paulo Brito and Cecilia Mateos-Pedrero
Recycling 2026, 11(2), 30; https://doi.org/10.3390/recycling11020030 - 2 Feb 2026
Viewed by 78
Abstract
Mobile pyrolysis systems offer a practical pathway for the decentralized valorization of biomass waste, addressing the high logistical and economic burdens of transporting low-density, moisture-rich feedstocks to centralized facilities. By operating directly at the source, these systems convert diverse agricultural and forestry residues [...] Read more.
Mobile pyrolysis systems offer a practical pathway for the decentralized valorization of biomass waste, addressing the high logistical and economic burdens of transporting low-density, moisture-rich feedstocks to centralized facilities. By operating directly at the source, these systems convert diverse agricultural and forestry residues into biochar, bio-oil, pyrogas, and wood vinegar, while reducing transport volumes and associated emissions. Reported mobile reactors process between 4 kg per batch and 10 t/day, achieving biochar yields of 33–44 wt.% at 400 °C and bio-oil yields of 55–68 wt.% in fast pyrolysis at 500–550 °C, demonstrating performance comparable to stationary installations. This review synthesizes current mobile pyrolysis technologies, including reactor configurations, feedstock suitability, operational constraints, and recent advances in automation, real-time monitoring, and machine learning-based optimization. The agricultural and industrial applications of pyrolysis products are examined, with emphasis on soil health enhancement, biopesticide activity, renewable gas generation, and carbon sequestration. Emerging international projects and commercial efforts are highlighted, illustrating growing interest in flexible, low-carbon pyrolysis solutions for rural waste management and distributed bioresource utilization, while outlining the technological gaps that remain to be addressed. Full article
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28 pages, 2749 KB  
Review
Refuse-Derived Fuel (RDF) for Low-Carbon Waste-to-Energy: Advances in Preparation Technologies, Thermochemical Behavior, and High-Efficiency Combustion Systems
by Hao Jiao, Jingzhe Li, Xijin Cao, Zhiliang Zhang, Yingxu Liu, Di Wang, Ka Li, Wei Zhang and Lin Gong
Energies 2026, 19(3), 751; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19030751 - 30 Jan 2026
Viewed by 139
Abstract
Refuse-derived fuel (RDF) presents a viable strategy to concurrently address the challenges of municipal solid waste management and the need for alternative energy. In this context, the present review systematically synthesizes recent advances in RDF preparation, combustion behavior, and efficient utilization technologies. The [...] Read more.
Refuse-derived fuel (RDF) presents a viable strategy to concurrently address the challenges of municipal solid waste management and the need for alternative energy. In this context, the present review systematically synthesizes recent advances in RDF preparation, combustion behavior, and efficient utilization technologies. The study examines the full chain of RDF production—including waste selection, mechanical/optical/magnetic sorting, granulation, briquetting, and chemical modification—highlighting how pretreatment technologies influence fuel homogeneity, calorific value, and emissions. The thermochemical conversion characteristics of RDF are systematically analyzed, covering the mechanism differences among slow pyrolysis, fast pyrolysis, flash pyrolysis, pyrolysis mechanisms, catalytic pyrolysis, fragmentation behavior, volatile release patterns, and kinetic modeling using Arrhenius and model-free isoconversional methods (e.g., FWO). Special attention is given to co-firing and high-efficiency combustion technologies, including ultra-supercritical boilers, circulating fluidized beds, and rotary kilns, where fuel quality, ash fusion behavior, slagging, bed agglomeration, and particulate emissions determine operational compatibility. Integrating recent findings, this review identifies the key technical bottlenecks—feedstock variability, chlorine/sulfur release, heavy-metal contaminants, ash-related issues, and the need for standardized RDF quality control. Emerging solutions such as AI-assisted sorting, catalytic upgrading, optimized co-firing strategies, and advanced thermal conversion systems (oxy-fuel, chemical looping, supercritical steam cycles) are discussed within the broader context of carbon reduction and circular economy transitions. Overall, RDF represents a scalable, flexible, and high-value waste-to-energy pathway, and the review provides insights into future research directions, system optimization, and policy frameworks required to support its industrial deployment. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section I1: Fuel)
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22 pages, 2455 KB  
Article
Temperature, Nitrogen, and Carbon Constraints on Growth and Metabolism of Regional Microalgae Strains
by Gulnaz Galieva, Mariam El Rawas, Darya Khlebova, Svetlana Selivanovskaya and Polina Galitskaya
Environments 2026, 13(2), 73; https://doi.org/10.3390/environments13020073 - 29 Jan 2026
Viewed by 338
Abstract
The rapid rise in atmospheric CO2 necessitates strategies for mitigation and valorization. Microalgae offer potential through simultaneous CO2 capture and production of high-value biomolecules. Five Chlorophyta strains (A–E: Micractinium sp., Chlamydomonas sp., Micractinium sp., Chlorococcum sp., and Chlorella vulgaris) were [...] Read more.
The rapid rise in atmospheric CO2 necessitates strategies for mitigation and valorization. Microalgae offer potential through simultaneous CO2 capture and production of high-value biomolecules. Five Chlorophyta strains (A–E: Micractinium sp., Chlamydomonas sp., Micractinium sp., Chlorococcum sp., and Chlorella vulgaris) were isolated from temperate waters and soils and tested for growth and biochemical responses under controlled nitrogen availability (low: 0.346 g L−1 nitrate; high: 0.6 g L−1 nitrate + ammonia), carbon supply (low: 0.04% CO2; high: 4% CO2), and cultivation systems (batch reactors, fermenters, and varied illumination). Over 14 days, maximum dry biomass was achieved in batch cultivation with CO2 sparging, low nitrogen, and continuous light, ranging from 1.47 g L−1 (strain A) to 2.67 g L−1 (strain D). Biomass composition varied: proteins, 25–45%; carbohydrates, 20–35%; and lipids, 18–28%. Nitrogen limitation promoted lipid accumulation (e.g., strain D: +40%) with concurrent protein decline (−25%). Chlorophyll a/b displayed strain-specific plasticity; high CO2 generally increased chlorophyll, while nitrogen stress reduced it up to 50%. Overall, this study demonstrates that locally adapted Chlorophyta strains can achieve high biomass productivity under CO2 enrichment while allowing for flexible redirection of carbon flux toward lipids, carbohydrates, or pigments through nutrient management. Among the tested isolates, strains D and E emerged as the most promising candidates for integrated CO2 sequestration and biomass production, while strains B, C, and D showed strong potential for biodiesel feedstock; strain A for carbohydrate valorization; and strain E for chlorophyll extraction. Future research should focus on scale-up validation in pilot photobioreactors under continuous operation, optimization of two-stage cultivation strategies for lipid production, integration with industrial CO2 point sources, and strain improvement using modern genomics-assisted breeding and genome-editing technologies. These efforts will support the translation of regional microalgal resources into scalable carbon-capture and bioproduct platforms. Full article
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18 pages, 8932 KB  
Article
Polyphenylene Sulfide-Based Compositions with Solid Fillers for Powder Injection Molding
by Dmitry V. Dudka, Azamat L. Slonov, Khasan V. Musov, Aslanbek F. Tlupov, Azamat A. Zhansitov, Svetlana Yu. Khashirova and Alexander Ya. Malkin
Polymers 2026, 18(3), 341; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym18030341 - 28 Jan 2026
Viewed by 172
Abstract
Powder Injection Molding (PIM) is a versatile manufacturing technology widely used for fabricating components with complex geometries from metals and ceramics, yet its application to high-performance thermoplastics remains underutilized. This study explores the feasibility of manufacturing products from Polyphenylene Sulfide (PPS)—a promising linear [...] Read more.
Powder Injection Molding (PIM) is a versatile manufacturing technology widely used for fabricating components with complex geometries from metals and ceramics, yet its application to high-performance thermoplastics remains underutilized. This study explores the feasibility of manufacturing products from Polyphenylene Sulfide (PPS)—a promising linear aromatic polymer synthesized in powder form—using PIM technology and investigates the development of PE-based feedstocks with PPS and solid fillers. Regarding the matrix formulation, it was found that using pure paraffin as a binder limited the maximum PPS content to 20%. Consequently, a modified binder system consisting of Low-Density Polyethylene (LDPE) and paraffin in a 70:30 wt.% ratio was utilized, which successfully increased the PPS loading in the feedstock to 50% and enabled stable molding. Following matrix optimization, the study examined composites incorporating various fillers, including chalk, talc, and carbon fibers. Systematic rheological analysis confirmed that these composite suspensions possess characteristics necessary for molding products with complex geometries. Key results indicate that optimal sintering conditions were established to achieve the required mechanical properties. Among the tested fillers, carbon fibers were the most effective reinforcement, increasing the elastic modulus by 33% and flexural strength by 20%. Representative examples of samples successfully manufactured via this approach are presented. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Polymer Processing and Engineering)
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14 pages, 1779 KB  
Article
Electro-Reforming of Biomass Gasification Tar with Simultaneous Hydrogen Evolution
by Umberto Calice, Francesco Zimbardi, Nadia Cerone and Vito Valerio
Processes 2026, 14(3), 444; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr14030444 - 27 Jan 2026
Viewed by 124
Abstract
In this study, an electrochemical valorization strategy on liquid byproducts from hazelnut shell gasification was developed to couple waste remediation with energy-efficient hydrogen production. The aqueous phase, rich in organic compounds, is processed in an anion exchange membrane (AEM) cell, where pure hydrogen [...] Read more.
In this study, an electrochemical valorization strategy on liquid byproducts from hazelnut shell gasification was developed to couple waste remediation with energy-efficient hydrogen production. The aqueous phase, rich in organic compounds, is processed in an anion exchange membrane (AEM) cell, where pure hydrogen evolved at the cathode while organic pollutants are oxidized at the anode. First, the feedstock is thoroughly characterized using gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC-MS), identifying a complex matrix of water-soluble aromatic compounds such as phenols, catechols, and other aromatics compounds, with concentrations reaching up to 2.9 g/kg for catechols. Then, the electro-reforming process is optimized using Nickel oxide–hydroxide (Ni(O)OH) electrodes with a loading of 0.75 mg/cm2. This methodology relies on the favorable thermodynamics of organic oxidation, which requires a lower onset potential (0.4 V) compared to the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) observed in the alkaline control (0.52 V), and the low overpotential of the Nickel oxide–hydroxide electrode towards the oxidized species. Consequently, the organic load undergoes progressive oxidation into hydrophilic and less bioaccumulating species and carbon dioxide, allowing for the simultaneous generation of pure hydrogen at the cathode at a reduced cell voltage. Elevated stability was observed, with a substantial abatement—78% of the initial organic load—of organic compounds achieved over 80 h at a fixed cell voltage of 0.5 V, and a specific energy consumption for hydrogen production of 38.5 MJkgH21. This represents a step forward in the development of technologies that reduce the energy intensity of hydrogen generation while valorizing biomass gasification residues. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Advances in Hydrogen Energy)
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27 pages, 6194 KB  
Review
Biochar Innovations for Organic Pollutant Remediation in Contaminated Soils
by Pengfei Li, Ying Liu, Yangyang Sun and Congyu Zhang
Molecules 2026, 31(3), 432; https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules31030432 - 27 Jan 2026
Viewed by 280
Abstract
Soil contamination by organic pollutants such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), pesticides, pharmaceuticals, and petroleum hydrocarbons has emerged as a global environmental concern due to their persistence, bioaccumulation, and potential health risks. Biochar, a carbon-rich material derived from the pyrolysis of biomass, has [...] Read more.
Soil contamination by organic pollutants such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), pesticides, pharmaceuticals, and petroleum hydrocarbons has emerged as a global environmental concern due to their persistence, bioaccumulation, and potential health risks. Biochar, a carbon-rich material derived from the pyrolysis of biomass, has attracted increasing attention as an environmentally friendly and cost-effective amendment for remediating contaminated soils. This review systematically summarizes recent advances in the application of biochar for the remediation of organic pollutants in soils to guide the development of more effective biochar-based strategies for sustainable soil remediation. The physicochemical properties of biochar influencing pollutant interactions are discussed, including surface area, pore structure, functional groups, and aromaticity. Mechanisms such as adsorption, sequestration, microbial interaction enhancement, and catalytic degradation are elucidated. Moreover, this review highlights the influence of feedstock types, pyrolysis conditions, biochar modification strategies, and environmental factors on biochar performance. The analysis reveals that biochar performance is strongly dependent on feedstock selection, pyrolysis conditions, and post-modification strategies, which jointly determine pollutant immobilization efficiency and long-term stability. Current challenges, such as long-term stability, pollutant desorption, and ecological impacts, are critically examined. Finally, future perspectives on the design of engineered biochar and its integration with other remediation technologies are proposed. Rationally engineered biochar, particularly when integrated with biological or physicochemical remediation technologies, demonstrates strong potential for efficient and sustainable soil remediation. Full article
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25 pages, 2186 KB  
Review
Bio-Oil from Phototrophic Microorganisms: Innovative Technologies and Strategies
by Kenzhegul Bolatkhan, Ardak B. Kakimova, Bolatkhan K. Zayadan, Akbota Kabayeva, Sandugash K. Sandybayeva, Aliyam A. Dauletova and Tatsuya Tomo
BioTech 2026, 15(1), 11; https://doi.org/10.3390/biotech15010011 - 26 Jan 2026
Viewed by 157
Abstract
The transition to low-carbon energy systems requires scalable and energy-efficient routes for producing liquid biofuels that are compatible with existing fuel infrastructures. This review focuses on bio-oil production from phototrophic microorganisms, highlighting their high biomass productivity, rapid growth, and inherent capacity for carbon [...] Read more.
The transition to low-carbon energy systems requires scalable and energy-efficient routes for producing liquid biofuels that are compatible with existing fuel infrastructures. This review focuses on bio-oil production from phototrophic microorganisms, highlighting their high biomass productivity, rapid growth, and inherent capacity for carbon dioxide fixation as key advantages over conventional biofuel feedstocks. Recent progress in thermochemical conversion technologies, particularly hydrothermal liquefaction (HTL) and fast pyrolysis, is critically assessed with respect to their suitability for wet and dry algal biomass, respectively. HTL enables direct processing of high-moisture biomass while avoiding energy-intensive drying, whereas fast pyrolysis offers high bio-oil yields from lipid-rich feedstocks. In parallel, catalytic upgrading strategies, including hydrodeoxygenation and related hydroprocessing routes, are discussed as essential steps for improving bio-oil stability, heating value, and fuel compatibility. Beyond conversion technologies, innovative biological and biotechnological strategies, such as strain optimization, stress induction, co-cultivation, and synthetic biology approaches, are examined for their role in tailoring biomass composition and enhancing bio-oil precursors. The integration of microalgal cultivation with wastewater utilization is briefly considered as a supporting strategy to reduce production costs and improve overall sustainability. Overall, this review emphasizes that the effective coupling of advanced thermochemical conversion with targeted biological optimization represents the most promising pathway for scalable bio-oil production from phototrophic microorganisms, positioning algal bio-oil as a viable contributor to future low-carbon energy systems. Full article
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